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English Senior High

画像横になってすみません blow「息を吹きかける」、steaming「湯気の立った」はわかったのですが、間にあるこのacrossってなんですか!? blow acrossで繋がってるのかなーって思ったのですが辞書引いても出てきませんでした😭 よろしくお願いします

3 <英文構造> Somewhere, millions of years ago, just after learn... 同格 e fire, the primitive human was faced with a difficult technological dilemma: how to cool his piping-hot food enough to be コロン以下で dilemma の内容を説明 疑問詞 + to 不定詞 「・・・するのに十分に」 able to eat it. Surely he must have burned his tongue enough times. He would have to find 助動詞 + have done 過去の習慣を表す would a way of eating the hot stuff. Then he must have discovered that by putting his lips together 助動詞 have done discovered の目的語 and blowing across) a steaming bowl of mammoth stew, the food magically cooled). Why? He S hadn't a clue, but it worked. FOCUS 助動詞 PE he must have burned his tongue : 過去の経験や完了の意味を含む助動詞 must + have done 「・・・ したに違いない」 の形→ 「彼(=原 始人)は舌をやけどしたに違いない」。 (→重要構文 31 て考えてす 間 この死行前は何 he must have discovered that ~ the food magically cooled: inc must have discovered の目的語は that 節 (that cooled)。 that を代名詞の「それ」 と訳さないよ うに注意しよう。 that節の主語・述語は the food (magically) cooled 「食べ物が (魔法のように) 冷 めた」。 その前の by putting 〜は「・・・することによって」 を意味する前置詞 by + 動名詞の表現。 buman puc すべき ... enough to be : how to cool は疑問詞 + to 不定詞 「どのように~すべきか〜の l.2 how to cool 仕方」の表現。 「であるほど十分に」 を意味し cool を修飾。 「そ (→ 重要構文 10 enough to be Hold wasob 313860 れを食べられるくらい十分に冷ます」 となる。 → 重要構文 11 ivillization l.3 find a way of eating the hot stuff : 同格を表す of でつながっている→ 「….する方法」と訳す。 RENSE) Vocabulary Check NDOW 訳 どこかで、何百万年も前、火を使うことを覚えた直後、原始人は、ある困難な技術的なジレンマ [板挟み ] に直面していた。 すなわち, ものすごく熱い食べ物を食べることができるくらいに冷ます方法である。 彼 はきっと何回となく舌をやけどしたに違いない。 彼は熱い物を食べる方法を見つけなければならなかった。 そんなとき彼は、 唇をすぼめて湯気の立つマンモスのシチューの入ったお椀に息を吹きかけることで、食べ 物が魔法のように冷めることを発見したに違いない。なぜなのか。 彼にはまったく見当がつかなかったが, その方法はうまくいったのである。 vody tavsundw) snsig 「原始の、原始的な」 ■ primitive □technological 「技術的な」 □ burn MG SRI 文重 「~をやけどする」 Vocabulary Plust ~ in svol orwalqoo1 somewhere 「どこかで」 ■ be faced with 「〜に直面している」 □ put ~ together 「~をあわせる」 「手がかり」 ■ clue

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English Senior High

答えが分かりません。教えてください🙏 Part1~3の内容をふまえて英語で答える問題です。 自分の回答 1・It is ground and processed into bread , toltillas,or cornflakes. 2・Because the left... Read More

1 Part 世界の人々は日々の食事に何を食べているのでしょう。 1 Each country has its own staple food, a food which is commonly eaten every day. Staple foods provide carbohydrates, which are our energy source. The major staple foods are rice, wheat, corn and some root vegetables. Rice is eaten mainly in Asia, boiled, steamed, or sometimes made into noodles. Wheat is eaten in Europe and North America. It is usually ground into flour and made into bread or pasta. Corn has been a staple food for people in South America. It is ground and processed into bread, tortillas, or cornflakes. The most common root vegetables are potatoes. They are eaten as a staple food in various areas from South America to Europe. Yams or taro are also eaten widely in Africa, in tropical areas in Asia and in the Pacific. Root vegetables are usually steamed s or boiled, and sometimes mashed before being served. 2 Though we eat staple foods for every meal, they are not necessarily the main part of our diet. * be made into ~ ataple food Lesson 2 Food Culture Phrase Reading Part 2 Part2. 3 Nowadays/about 40 percent of the 今日、世界の約40パーセントの人々が食べ物を people in the world eat food/ 食べます 日常的に手で。 with their hands regularly// Most of them are in Africa, / その内のほとんどの人々はアフリカにいます in the Middle East and in some parts of 中東やアジアの一部に。 Asia.// They believe hands are cleaner than other 彼らは他の器具よりも手の方が清潔だと考えて utensils./ います。 which can be used by someone else. // それは他の誰かに使われたかもしれない。 When you eat with your hands,/ 自分の手で食べるとき, you can feel the texture and temperature 食べ物の感触や温度を感じることができます そしてそれは食べ物をよりおいしく味わわせます。 of food/and it makes food taste better. // In some regions./ 地域によっては, however, / しかし, the left hand is never used / 左手は絶対に使われることはありません because it is considered to be unclean. // なぜならそれは不潔だと考えられているから。 4 Another 30 percent of the people in the 世界の別の30パーセントの人々は、主に東アジ world, /mainly in East Asia, / アの (人々), use chopsticks.// 箸を使います。 They are useful for eating sticky or hot それらはべたべたする食べ物や熱い食べ物を食 food.// べるときに便利です。 They can also cut food into smaller それらはまた食べ物を小さく切り分けたりもで きます。 pieces, / mix ingredients before eating,/ 食べる前に素材をかき混ぜたり、 口の中に食べ物を運んだり。 and carry food into the mouth.// Which do you think is better to use, / hands or chopsticks?// あなたはどちらを使うのがよいと思いますか. 手と箸では。 staple common carbohya source com k root veg bolled steamed North Am pasta ca South Ana stuff a processic p tortillia(s) kat comiaio kirafiki yam (5) Ju taro mashed Imaju necessarly

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English Senior High

写真逆さですみません💦 1️⃣と2️⃣の文章を50~60字程度で意味を変えずに文を書く時どうやって書けばいいのか教えて欲しいです! なかなか60におさまらずどうすれば良いか分かりません

どhargen 1」 Reading Scene 1 Scer G-1 ne was 19 years old then Afo ho oraduated. she began her career as a L。 Ja G as Journalists than women. so she wwote under the name E. R. Scidmore to G-3 nide her gender. Her writing became Dobular. and she was able to save enough 8 5 th G-1 noney to travel. Scidmore was alwavs interested in travel_and it was her dream to visit foreign countries. Her first trip was to Alaska by steamship. When she returned, she wrote about the experience and createda guidebook d t G-1 about it. This was about 75 years before it became part of the United States. Scene 2 2 After that she traveled to many countries and wrote about her experiences | in them. In her travels, she visited Japan and fell in love with the cherry blossoms. She especially loved to see the reflection of the cherry blossoms in G-3 water. Planting cherry trees along the Potomac River in Washington, D.C. became her dream. 3 After she returned from her first trip to Japan, she wrote letters to people 15 journalist and wrote for various newspapers. At that time, more men worked 1 Eliza Scidmore graduated from Oberlin College in Ohio in the US in 1875. They did not want trees fro Scidmore's Cherry Trees

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English Senior High

Q1,Q2,Q3 全部じゃなくていいので教えてください 高2

Lesson Real-World English Instant Noodles Read and Respond Today, instant noodles are popular as a gquick meal worldwide, but most of us don't know that they were originally invented in Japan in 1958. After World War II, Japan was suffering from a serious food shortage. The Ministry of Health encouraged people to eat bread made from wheat flour, which was supplied by the United States. Ando Momofuku, the president of an Osaka-based food company, didn't like bread, so he set about creating something different from the imported wheat flour. He tried to make a food that would appeal to Japanese tastes, and his answer was instant noodles. After months of trial and error, Ando invented a way to deep-fry noodles to preserve them. All his customers had to do was pour hot water over them and let them steam for a couple of minutes. This quick and easy dish was a great success. Instant noodles quickly became popular all over Japan. Words & Phrases > food shortage 食糧不足 > the Ministry of Health (当時の)厚生省 トwheat flour 小麦粉 > Osaka-based 大阪を拠点とした > set about ~に取りかかる トmonths of trial and error 何か月にも及ぶ試行錯誤 > deep-fry たっぷりの油で揚げる [Questions] Q1. Who invented instant noodles? Q2. Why did the Ministry of Health encourage people to eat bread after World War II? Q3. Why were instant noodles so successful?

Unresolved Answers: 1
English Senior High

4行目の In addition からの一文の訳し方を教えてください 22.23の答えは42153です あか

Electric Cars pectric emre are finally becoming commonplace on roads around the world。 Mior car brands 。an, BMW, Toyota, Volkswagen, and Ford are now mass-producing electric cars、 The js currently []( 0きき520. 0( (0521i)(( ).with クコ1 1(S2S 1 NisS4n ld in the United States. In additi ro0 em sd Ton, many governments are actively supporting this r75 (旨 旧iwe rewoluton as (2しーー 2( 22 )( )( 2zs )( ) and a paney roV anong the people of many countries. fe rnterestingly, electric cars [3 Di(較240)1( D)(計雪25敵) (388)(き32) (2 The fs electric cars went on ale in 1884 and were designed by the Britsh eneineer ah N as rker Hs interest in electic cars stemmed from concerns about the smoke and poluion mn randon the Gime. It is interesting to note that worries about [212 SS)^( >20icoe) DU(半527.5)i( - ) nearly 150 years later。 At the beginning of the 20『 了 40percentofauomO mn 8 United States were powered by steam, 38 percent by clecticity and 22 arent by g980line By the time of the Second World War though, both steam and electic cars had peared because they 5 生3) (PER6328さご!(5P205E382)(を20 ) imost disapl 6 ) and efficiency of the internal combustion engine developed by Karl Benz and Gottieb Daimler Anthony Sellick, John Barton。小符原亜衣 World of Wonders Inspiring the Futurel 成美党 員】⑳. 21) ① worlds ⑨ te ⑧ car ④ electic ⑥⑤ top-selling 2] (22. 23) ① protecting ② about ③⑬ environment ④ concerns ⑤ the

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